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Nick Cohen
Monday 28th September 2009
Apology to Nick Davies

A few weeks ago, I wrote a short jokey blogpost on the subject of  Onion TV's satire of conspiracy theories about the media. (Weather Channel Accused of Pro-Weather Bias, which you can watch here.)

The example of a media conspiracy theory I used was Nick Davies's account of the Observer's coverage of the Iraq war in his book Flat Earth News which, I said, contained stories he must have known weren't true. Nick Davies has objected vigorously. As Mr Davies is undoubtedly a serious journalist, I apologise for any suggestion that he is less than honest and regret any hurt I have inflicted on his feelings. But I should say for the record that although his Flat Earth News website announces that Davies "takes the lid off newspapers and broadcasters, exposing the mechanics of falsehood, distortion and propaganda," my experience of serious print journalists and broadcasters is that they do not engage in falsehood, distortion and propaganda.    

Mistakes in journalism happen for two reasons. 1) Information, which appears to be genuine at the time of publication, turns out to be false. 2) People see the same information through different ideological spectacles, and reach wildly different conclusions.  

In fairness to Mr Davies, I think we are dealing with the second explanation here.   

The reason I wrote what I wrote is that in Flat Earth News Nick Davies describes how Roger Alton, the previous editor of the paper, supported the second Iraq war, as was his right. Davies then presented the Observer as being in thrall to the warmongers in Downing Street and publishing false stories to please Blair. The Observer, like many other papers (see point 1 above), did indeed publish stories from official sources which turned out to be self-serving nonsense. The problem I and many other journalists at the Observer have with Davies's view is that the Observer also published stories Downing Street did not want to hear. The most sensational was a piece by Martin Bright about  how GCHQ was spying on UN security council members in the run up to the war, which was leaked to us by Katherine Gun, a whistleblower inside the listening station. (Summary here). 

The story went round the world and did Tony Blair no good at all. Davies in his book tried to get round this inconvenient fact by saying that the story caused heated debates in the newsroom. Of course it did. The editor could have been up at the Old Bailey on a charge of breaking the Official Secrets Act -- you would expect there to be fractious debate. So I asked Martin Bright to give his account of what happened in the hope of settling the matter. Here it is:

"I was happy to talk to Nick Davies about The Observer and the Iraq War because I thought it was important that he heard what happened from the people who were there. I explained from the outset, however, that on the Katharine Gun story I did not believe Roger Alton had bowed to political pressure to delay publication of the story. Roger's judgement about the story appeared to me entirely journalistic although he may have had some ideological resistance to an antiwar story. Indeed I said it was entirely to his credit that he ran the story considering his position on the war. Nick Davies chose to interpret events differently"

So he did. I merely note that the story, along with many other critical pieces, made it into the paper none the less.

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Phil
September 29th, 2009
9:09 PM
which, I said, contained stories he must have known weren't true Come on, Nick - you said it contained stories which he knew weren't true. When you're issuing a retraction, it's generally considered good form to retract what you actually said.

Chris Williams
September 29th, 2009
6:09 PM
This 'apology' is inaccurate. Nick C did not use the words 'must have known' in his original accusation. The accusation did not rely on supposition - instead it went like this: "He presented as fact allegations I knew weren't true, and, I later discovered he knew weren't true." How stupid do you think we are, Nick C? When are you going to apologise for something that you actually wrote, rather than for what you wish you'd written?

Nick Davies
September 28th, 2009
4:09 PM
I'm glad Nick Cohen has finally retracted his claim that I knowingly published false information in Flat Earth News. It took weeks of pressure to get him to do what most journalists would have freely offered to do as soon as they realised they were wrong. I'm sorry that he still can't bring himself to tell the truth about what happened at the Observer in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq, which was an editorial catastrophe at the expense of its readers. I'm glad I exposed it. I'm grateful to Cohen's many colleagues who helped me to do so, including Martin Bright, who is an honest man who has publicly defended the book including its account of the 'ideological resistance' around the story of the spying on UN security council members. That might surprise anybody reading Cohen's account of it here. But his account is as twisted as some of the Observer's coverage of the build-up to war. Anyone who is interested in the real version could email me at mail@nickdavies.net and I'll send them the text of the Observer chapter, so that they can read for themselves what Cohen fails to tell.

Henry
September 28th, 2009
2:09 PM
There's a 'Steve' who's been had on this one, as have others too. But there's no more chance of an apology coming from him than there is of getting a ford escort inside a pint glass.

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About Nick Cohen

Nick Cohen is a columnist for the Observer. You Can't Read This Book, his account of modern censorship, will be published this month by encounter. 

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